Hawai‘i Gets $6M for Public Health Preparedness

Senator Mazie K. Hirono announced today that Hawaiʻi will receive $6,125,363 from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to increase the state’s ability to prepare and respond to potential public health threats.

Senator Hirono and Governor Ige get a firsthand look at Hawaiʻi Biotech’s work in developing a Zika virus vaccine. File photo credit: Office of US Senator Mazie Hirono.

“Our experience fighting Zika, dengue, and other diseases has taught us how important it is for states and local governments to have the resources they need to confront potential public health threats,” said Senator Hirono. “I will continue to push to ensure that Hawaiʻi receives the funding it needs to prepare for and respond to future public health emergencies.”

The federal funding was awarded to the State of Hawaiʻi Department of Health to support its Disease Outbreak Control Division’s Public Health Preparedness Branch, which helps DOH effectively respond to public health threats, emergencies, and disasters that threaten local communities throughout the state.

Earlier this year, Sen. Hirono led a letter to the Senate Appropriations Labor, Health and Human Services, Education, and Related Agencies Subcommittee Chairman Roy Blunt and Ranking Member Patty Murray urging for the continued funding of programs that help ensure the nation’s hospitals and public health systems are able to safeguard against public health threats.